Fujimori, Alberto ( born July 28, 1938 , Lima, PeruPeruvian politician and president of Peru from 1990 to 2000.

Fujimori, the son of Japanese immigrants, earned a degree in agronomic engineering from the National Agrarian University in Lima (1961). He then traveled abroad to pursue graduate studies at the University of Wisconsin and the University of Strasbourg, France. After returning to Peru, he joined the faculty at his alma mater, eventually serving as rector (1984–89). In 1988–89 Fujimori hosted a television show, Concertando (“Getting Together”), which examined environmental and agrarian issues.

In 1989, as terrorism and hyperinflation plagued Peru, Fujimori began a bid for the presidency as the head of a new party, Cambio 90 (“Change 90”). His successful grassroots campaign quickly garnered attention because of Fujimori’s Japanese ancestry and his populist rhetoric, including criticism of the economic shock tactics advocated by the conservative candidate, novelist Mario Vargas Llosa. In June 1990 Fujimori defeated Vargas Llosa in a runoff election with 56.5 percent of the vote. However, on August 8, less than two weeks after taking office, Fujimori instituted austerity measures as harsh as those he earlier had decried, including raising the price of gasoline by 3,000 percent. The policy—popularly known as “Fujishock”—wiped out inflation but caused immediate layoffs and hardships among the poor.

In April 1992, increasingly frustrated with the legislature, which supported few of his programs, Fujimori staged an autogolpe (“self-administered coup”) with military support, declaring a state of emergency, dissolving Congress, and calling for a new constitution (promulgated in 1993). Fujimori’s political allies subsequently won a majority of legislative seats, which allowed the president to rule nearly unopposed. On the economic front, he carried out neoliberal policies such as privatizing state-owned mines and utility companies. Fujimori’s government also prosecuted an anti-insurgency campaign on various fronts, including arming villagers and conducting secretive military trials of suspected terrorists. Fujimori claimed credit for the program’s successes, including the capture in 1992 of Abimael Guzmán Reynoso, the leader of the Shining Path (Sendero Luminoso) rebel movement and the storming in 1997 of the Japanese ambassador’s residence in Lima, where dozens of hostages had been held by members of the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement.

In the mid-1990s Fujimori’s wife, Susana Higuchi, publicly denounced him as corrupt and undemocratic and sought to run against him in the 1995 elections. Fujimori, however, had earlier passed a law prohibiting immediate relatives of the president from seeking the office, and she was ultimately barred from entering the race. He named his eldest daughter the country’s new first lady and easily won a second term with 64 percent of the vote. Meanwhile, Vladimiro Montesinos, head of the country’s secret police and Fujimori’s closest adviser, increased his influence in the military and used the country’s secret police to infiltrate opposition political parties, bribe legislators and electoral officials, muzzle the media, embezzle and redirect government funds, and carry out human rights abuses, including illegal arrests and torture. Many Peruvians subsequently accused Fujimori of condoning those acts and of destroying relevant evidence, though he denied the charges.

Fujimori sought a controversial third term in 2000, after dismissing high justices who had declared his candidacy unconstitutional. The main opposition candidate, Alejandro Toledo, withdrew from the final round of the election after claiming electoral fraud. Thus, Fujimori won the election unopposed but faced condemnation from the Organization of American States, the United States government, and an increasing number of Peruvians. His government crumbled in late 2000 when a video was released that showed Montesinos bribing a congressman. Amid growing allegations of corruption, Fujimori left Peru, eventually arriving in Japan, where he announced his resignation. Peru’s legislature, however, rejected it and formally voted Fujimori out of office, declaring him “morally unfit.”

As Peruvian officials investigated charges against Fujimori, including allegations that he was involved in the killing of more than two dozen people by death squads, the Japanese government declared (2001) that he had dual Peruvian-Japanese citizenship and refused repeated extradition requests. Meanwhile, Fujimori continued to influence Peruvian affairs from abroad. In 2005 he traveled to Chile in hopes of contesting the 2006 presidential election—though he was prohibited from seeking office until 2011. Upon his arrival he was arrested at Peru’s request. His petition to appear on the 2006 ballot was later rejected by Peru’s election tribunal. In 2007, while still imprisoned in Chile, Fujimori unsuccessfully ran for a seat in Japan’s Diet (parliament).

In September of that year, 2007 Chile’s Supreme Court approved his extradition to Peru, ending a protracted legal battle. A day after the ruling, Fujimori was returned to his home country, where he faced charges of corruption, kidnapping, and murder. In December 2007 he was convicted for ordering an illegal search of the home of Montesinos’s wife in 2000 and was fined and sentenced to six years in prison for abuse of power; . Fujimori also continued to stand trial in Lima for the more serious charges of human rights violations related to his time in office. In April 2009, following a 15-month trial, Fujimori was found guilty of ordering military death squads to carry out killings and kidnappings during his presidency.